Later today, the new power cord for my laptop should be delivered. I hope the damn thing works.

Good Afternoon,

…my thoughts are a bit off this afternoon, almost like I’m in a Virginia Woolf stream of consciousness state of mind. Sometimes it’s difficult enough to get my thoughts organized in some kind of rational order. But today it is random and ridiculous…

Tonight is the STFU speech…oops, I mean SOTU speech. (Eh, innit the same thing?) We will be live blogging it here, so if you are around, be sure to stop by.

Just one story for you this afternoon, and it deals with the horse meat scandal over in Great Britain. Yup, you know what I am talking about!

“Ground beef” with a touch of Mr. Ed. From the same folks who brought you Mad Cow disease…there is now “beef” being sold in England and Europe that contain horse meat.

I’m not sure we have mentioned the horsemeat scandal here on the blog, but if you have been living in a barn for the past few weeks… here is a quick review of what happening in, on and around the burger scene across the pond.

It did not stop there, looks like Burger Kings in Great Britain also sold the Trigger burgers, since their meat supplier was the same company who supplied the supermarkets.

Then…Hi Ho, what d’ya know… Silver found himself in other “beef” products, like frozen lasagna dinners from a company called Findus. (Now, with a name like Findus….it has to be good…cough, cough.) As with Burger King, Findus Brand frozen dinner’s “beef” was also supplied by the same smeat factory. (Smeat btw is not a typo.)

The company bringing Seabiscuit to tables across Britain and the Continent of Europe is called Tesco. You can see Tesco’s technical director dude in the hot seat, responding to the horse DNA found in its “Trojan” beef products. View the video here:

Tesco’s technical director, Tim Smith, says his company does not yet know how many products containing horsemeat have been sold in their shops, and an investigation is under way into how it happened. Samples from one of Tesco’s burger lines contained 29% horsemeat relative to beef content. Traces of horsemeat have also been found in food products sold by Iceland, Lidl and Aldi.

Watching that man and his expressions reminds me of that SNL skit with Martin Short playing Nathan Thurm, the smoking sleazeball lawyer…

The UK’s horsemeat scandal was in “large part” the result of a switch from UK to foreign meat suppliers in 2012 caused by an abrupt change in European regulation that the government failed to contest, according to the expert who led the Food Standards Agency’s (FSA) surveillance programme for a decade.

The change meant that “desinewed meat” (DSM), a fine mince rubbed under pressure from carcasses, could no longer be called meat on packaging. DSM produced in the UK was the main ingredient in most value-range burgers, sausages, pies and kebabs and the change meant that thousands of tonnes of meat had to be sourced from elsewhere and at low cost.

A former senior scientist at the Food Standards Agency says an EU decision to reclassify a type of mincemeat widely used in the UK played a significant part in creating the horsemeat crisis.

Desinewed meat was a key ingredient in value items such as pies, lasagnes and other beef products.

Dr Mark Woolfe said the decision to ban it prompted producers to go outside the UK to source supplies of cheap mince.

He also raised the possibility that UK lamb products might need testing for horsemeat.

Until 2009 Dr Woolfe was the head of authenticity at the Food Standards Agency. He says the root cause of the current horse meat crisis can be traced back to a decision taken by the European Commission less than 12 months ago to ban a key food ingredient called desinewed meat.

Under pressure

This material was introduced in the the UK in the 1990s as a replacement for mechanically recovered meat (MRM). Sometimes called “pink slime” MRM was formed by removing residual meat from animal bones using high pressure water.

It was linked to the spread of the human form of mad cow disease and the UK government took steps to restrict it from the food chain.

Desinewed meat (DSM) was developed as a higher quality form of recovered meat. It was produced using low pressure, retained some structure and was regarded as a meat ingredient on value products.

Yup, and y’all know who buys value products. Poor or low income people.

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30 Comments on “Tuesday Afternoon…Eating a horse with no name.”

I think eating horsemeat is pretty common in Europe, sort of a ho hum thing to them. On principle though, I don’t like it any more than dogmeat eating. Or any meat eating. I’m working on becoming a vegetarian.

For the first time since July, I am having a hamburger patty……………lord it was about 12 oz. worth………and hell, I left it a little bit pink……..I am sure glad I don’t work for one those processing plants………..seabisquit with American Flag atop, oh lord.

Yeah, I guess horsemeat is common over in Europe, but I think it is rather interesting that horse was put into beef products that poorer people eat, and they did not label it as such.
That is what really gets me…

There’s a hierarchy in Buddhism based in sentience. Horses and dogs are considered to be 1step from human rebirth. Also the size of the animal and how many he feeds makes a difference … one cow provides food for many and 1 shrimp won’t even feed one.

Fox News opened a discussion on potential defense budget cuts with a graph which tracked changes in the United States’ defense spending, pushing the distortion that the U.S. is lagging behind China and Russia. But Fox neglected to acknowledge the actual amount these countries expend on defense; in reality, U.S. defense spending is greater than the next 12 top-spending countries combined.

On the February 12 edition of America’s Newsroom, host Bill Hemmer displayed a graph comparing the growth in the defense budgets of China, Russia, and the United States from 2007 – 2011. The chart, which assumed that sequester cuts to the U.S.’s defense budget will take effect, projected the change in these countries’ defense budgets through 2015.

In a move that should startle no Arizonan with a pulse, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio just released the results of an internal investigation into 400 mishandled sex crime investigations and–surprise!–no individuals should be held responsible, least of all the sheriff himself. Not only that, but for those individuals, like journalists, who want a copy of the report, it’ll cost $5,000, please. Make checks payable to the ‘Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office’ (MCSO). Quite a handy little money-making opportunity.

Senator Marco Rubio, Republican presidential timber fresh from the mill, distracted himself from thinking about his chance at Jindalesque glory tonight by voting against the Violence Against Women Act, and by limber up his throat for this evening’s grand performance with an exercise in pure weaselspeak.

Unfortunately, I could not support the final, entire legislation that contains new provisions that could have potentially adverse consequences. Specifically, this bill would mandate the diversion of a portion of funding from domestic violence programs to sexual assault programs, although there’s no evidence to suggest this shift will result in a greater number of convictions.

(Translation From The Original Weaselspeak: I took a call from FreedomWorks this morning.)

These funding decisions should be left up to the state-based coalitions that understand local needs best, but instead this new legislation would put those decisions into the hands of distant Washington bureaucrats in the Department of Justice.

(Translation From The Original Weaselspeak: As we all know, sexual assault and domestic violence are different in Mississippi than they are in New York. They are like local cuisine that way.)

Additionally, I have concerns regarding the conferring of criminal jurisdiction to some Indian tribal governments over all persons in Indian country, including non-Indians.

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